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Destiny Enjoy Wealth

Shubham_Ghongade
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Synopsis
About Jake who is a corporate 9 to 5 employee who doesn't even have money to send home. whom Destiny has given a second chance correct his life . This time Jake is determined to make it to the top of the world
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Chapter 1 - # Chapter 1: The Weight of Reality

Life is all about money, looks, and showoff—this bitter truth has become my daily mantra. Most

 of my problems could be solved by money, yet to earn that money, I need to sacrifice my soul to

 a soul-crushing 9-to-5 job. Well, can't say anything now. The irony isn't lost on me.

 Everything seems to be karma catching up, and here I am—Jake Cipher—just another cog in the

 machine, living off the lowest paycheck from what they call a "reputable" MNC. Not even a

 reputable position within it. All target-based work where a single error gives them reason enough

 to freeze your yearly increments. The performance review culture has turned us into nervous

 wrecks, constantly looking over our shoulders.

 I still have a little over four years before I hit the dreaded thirty. But fate wouldn't have it easy for

 me. Jake is a fat, 26-year-old man who should be thinking about settling down, maybe finding

 someone to marry. But who would want him? Sure, he has decent features buried somewhere

 under the layers of fat that no girl desires. The dating apps are brutal reminders of this reality—

 left swipes as far as the eye can see.

 And here I have this weirdo roommate with his quantum circuits humming away in his corner of

 our cramped apartment. "Roney, get this shit out of here! The electricity bill is more than our

 rent!" I sighed, staring at the contraption that looked like it belonged in a sci-fi movie rather than

 our modest two-bedroom flat in the suburbs.

 Roney is also a little over twenty-nine, brilliant beyond measure, with a love for physics and

 biochemistry that borders on obsession. The guy is both the smartest person I know and

 completely clueless at the same time. Research companies and prestigious colleges have been

 throwing unimaginable packages at him—we're talking millions here. He's declined them all.

 Every single one. Just for this forsaken project of his.

 But Roney isn't in the room right now. Probably gone out to smoke or some shit. The guy has his

 vices, just like the rest of us. Meanwhile, I'm stuck here with his machine that's driving our

 electricity costs through the roof. Three ACs are working at full speed just to keep this

 contraption cool, and the room temperature still feels normal, maybe even a little hot. Are the

 ACs even working properly?

 I've been thinking about my life a lot lately. How did I end up here? Four years ago, when I

 graduated with my Computer Science degree, I thought the world was my oyster. Fresh out of

 college, armed with theoretical knowledge and a head full of dreams. The career counselors had

 painted such rosy pictures—"The future belongs to tech," they said. "Computer Science

 graduates are in high demand."

 What a joke that turned out to be.

 The reality hit me like a freight train during my job search. The market had shifted dramatically.

 Artificial Intelligence wasn't just a buzzword anymore; it was actively replacing entry-level

 programmers. Companies were automating basic coding tasks, using AI to generate code, and

reducing their human workforce. The jobs that remained required years of experience I didn't

 have, or paid salaries that barely covered my education loan EMIs 

 I remember those endless months of applications, rejections, and false hopes. My parents kept

 asking about my job prospects, and I kept lying, telling them everything was fine, that I was

 being "selective" about opportunities. The truth was, I was getting desperate. My education

 loan of ₹8.5 lakhs was accruing interest daily, and my parents had already stretched their

 finances to support my engineering education.

 When I finally landed this job at the MNC, I thought my prayers had been answered. The reality

 was a harsh awakening. The salary of ₹3.2 lakhs per annum sounded decent on paper, but after

 taxes, PF deductions, and my loan EMI of ₹12,000 per month, I was left with barely enough to

 survive in the city. Rent, food, transportation, basic necessities—everything ate into whatever

 remained.

 The work culture was another nightmare altogether. Despite being called a "software engineer,"

 most of my time was spent on mundane, repetitive tasks that could probably be automated. The

 irony wasn't lost on me—I was doing work that AI would eventually replace, earning just enough

 to stay afloat while drowning in debt.

 My manager, Krishnan, was a typical corporate climber who treated performance reviews like

 life-or-death situations. "Jake, your Q3 numbers are concerning," he'd say during our monthly

 one-on-ones, as if missing a target by 2% was equivalent to corporate treason. The constant

 pressure, the threat of frozen increments, the fear of being laid off—it all weighed heavily on my

 mind.